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  1. In 1750 in a handwritten document Maria Theresa defined the core lands of the Monarchy, which consisted of the Austrian Lands (Lower Austria, Upper Austria, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola, the various territories on the Upper Adriatic as well as Tyrol and the Habsburg Swabian territories) and the Bohemian Lands (Bohemia, Moravia and the parts of Silesia that remained under Austrian rule).

  2. Maria Teresa Valburga Amália Cristina da Áustria[ 1] (em alemão: Maria Theresia Walburga Amalia Christina von Österreich, em húngaro: Habsburg Mária Terézia; Viena, 13 de maio de 1717 – Viena, 29 de novembro de 1780 ), foi a primeira e única mulher a governar sobre os domínios habsbúrgicos e a última chefe da Casa de Habsburgo (a ...

  3. María Teresa de Austria. (Madrid, 1638 - Versalles, 1683) Reina de Francia (1660-1683). Hija de Felipe IV de España, se casó en 1660 con Luis XIV de Francia. El matrimonio había sido concertado por Felipe IV en virtud del Tratado de los Pirineos (1659). María Teresa de Austria renunció a sus derechos hereditarios a la corona española a ...

  4. María Teresa de Austria (1767-1827) Retrato atribuido a Juan Enrique Schmidt, Museo nacional Eslovaco. María Teresa de Austria (en alemán, Maria Theresia von Österreich; Florencia, 14 de enero de 1767 - Leipzig, 7 de noviembre de 1827) fue una archiduquesa austríaca que fue la segunda esposa del rey Antonio I de Sajonia .

  5. 26 de nov. de 2021 · By contrast, Maria Theresa of Austria was highly coquettish, at least until she was widowed. The German chancellor’s model is more one of gender neutrality. Today, women are practically forced to wear a neutral suit, as if the aim were to make their femininity invisible. Hillary Clinton and Theresa May are elegant, but no more than that.

  6. War of the Austrian Succession, 1740–48. Maria Theresa. In October 1740 the Holy Roman emperor Charles VI, the last male Habsburg ruler, died and was succeeded by his daughter Maria Theresa, the young wife of the grand duke of Tuscany, Francis Stephen of Lorraine. Although no woman had ever served as Habsburg ruler, most assumed at the time ...

  7. Maria Theresa, the daughter of Emperor Charles VI and Elisabeth Christine of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel, was the first woman to sit on the Habsburg throne at the tender age of 23. She won the war on several fronts against other monarchs in Europe and become one of the most important administrative, educational and economic reformers in Austria.